Naaaaa -- don't you know, it's like the CLOUD baby, where everything goes and you push responsibility as far as you can and then right out the window. There's NO problems at all that an online contract or ROM update won't fix. And of course with surface mount chips, unfixable hardware, and no one ever reading the legals, they'll have to buy your *next* product with it's OWN new problems.
Planned Obsolescence? That's so 1990s. Now they need to pay you for your new product while the old one's still worki
Well, the better users have the issue of LJ that describes how to remove root from Linux. That, together with cgroups, means some are forgetting about such archaic notions.
There are some quality devices. Synology and QNAP NAS models have solid security, and if you need to add stuff like fail2ban, borg backup, gpg, or other items, that is easily accomplished.
You can have a NAS that is secure enough to sit on a public IP space (not sure why you want to), and be resistant to attack, provided you limit the IP space, enable 2FA, SSH RSA keys, and keep good backups.
Secure NAS products are out there... it is just that some companies just don't seem to care enough about making a sec
This is basically a single-drive NAS that has a way to log in and access your files when away from home. Sort of like Dropbox in a way, but with apparently terrible security.
So it seems like it's up to Axentra to fix their poorly coded Piece Of Shit? But do they really even care?
This kind of sloppy programming needs to come with easy-to-litigate civil remedie$ and then maybe it will stop.
and then maybe it will stop.
Naaaaa -- don't you know, it's like the CLOUD baby, where everything goes and you push responsibility as far as you can and then right out the window. There's NO problems at all that an online contract or ROM update won't fix. And of course with surface mount chips, unfixable hardware, and no one ever reading the legals, they'll have to buy your *next* product with it's OWN new problems.
Planned Obsolescence? That's so 1990s. Now they need to pay you for your new product while the old one's still worki
Well, the better users have the issue of LJ that describes how to remove root from Linux. That, together with cgroups, means some are forgetting about such archaic notions.
There are some quality devices. Synology and QNAP NAS models have solid security, and if you need to add stuff like fail2ban, borg backup, gpg, or other items, that is easily accomplished.
You can have a NAS that is secure enough to sit on a public IP space (not sure why you want to), and be resistant to attack, provided you limit the IP space, enable 2FA, SSH RSA keys, and keep good backups.
Secure NAS products are out there... it is just that some companies just don't seem to care enough about making a sec
This is basically a single-drive NAS that has a way to log in and access your files when away from home. Sort of like Dropbox in a way, but with apparently terrible security.